6-letter words containing r, e, p
- oupire — A vampire.
- packer — a group of things wrapped or tied together for easy handling or carrying; a bundle, especially one to be carried on the back of an animal or a person: a mule pack; a hiker's pack.
- padder — a highwayman who steals on foot
- pairle — a device representing the front of an ecclesiastical pallium, consisting of a broad Y -shaped form covered with crosses.
- palmer — Alice Elvira, 1855–1902, U.S. educator.
- palter — to talk or act insincerely or deceitfully; lie or use trickery.
- pamper — to treat or gratify with extreme or excessive indulgence, kindness, or care: to pamper a child; to pamper one's stomach.
- pander — a person who furnishes clients for a prostitute or supplies persons for illicit sexual intercourse; procurer; pimp.
- paneer — a fresh, soft cheese originating in India and made by curdling milk with an acid such as lemon juice.
- panier — a basket, especially a large one, for carrying goods, provisions, etc.
- panner — someone who pans for gold
- panter — of or relating to pants: pant cuffs.
- panzer — (especially in the German army) armored: a panzer unit.
- papers — a substance made from wood pulp, rags, straw, or other fibrous material, usually in thin sheets, used to bear writing or printing, for wrapping things, etc.
- papery — like paper; thin or flimsy: the papery petals of the narcissus.
- parade — a large public procession, usually including a marching band and often of a festive nature, held in honor of an anniversary, person, event, etc.
- parage — lineage, family, or birth
- parcae — an ancient Roman goddess of childbirth and destiny. Compare Parcae.
- parcel — an object, article, container, or quantity of something wrapped or packed up; small package; bundle.
- parded — having spots
- pardee — (as a mild oath) certainly; indeed
- pardie — verily; indeed
- paren. — parenthesis
- parent — a father or a mother.
- parera — a New Zealand duck, Anas superciliosa, with grey-edged brown feathers
- pareto — Vilfredo [veel-fre-daw] /vilˈfrɛ dɔ/ (Show IPA), 1848–1923, Italian sociologist and economist in Switzerland.
- pareve — having no meat or milk in any form as an ingredient and being permissible for use with both meat and dairy meals as stated in the dietary laws: a pareve bread; pareve soup.
- parget — any of various plasters or roughcasts for covering walls or other surfaces, especially a mortar of lime, hair, and cow dung for lining chimney flues.
- paries — Usually, parietes. Biology. a wall, as of a hollow organ; an investing part.
- parked — an area of land, usually in a largely natural state, for the enjoyment of the public, having facilities for rest and recreation, often owned, set apart, and managed by a city, state, or nation.
- parker — Charles Christopher, Jr ("Bird") 1920–55, U.S. jazz saxophonist and composer.
- parkes — Sir Henry. 1815–96, Australian journalist and politician born in England, five times premier of New South Wales, advocate of free trade and Federation, and a founder of the public education system
- parkie — a park keeper
- parled — talk; parley.
- parley — a discussion or conference.
- parole — language as manifested in the actual utterances produced by speakers of a language (contrasted with langue).
- parore — a dark brownish-green fish, Girella tricuspidata of coastal and estuarine waters in New Zealand's North Island and Australia
- parpen — perpend1 .
- parred — an equality in value or standing; a level of equality: The gains and the losses are on a par.
- parrel — Nautical. a sliding ring or collar of rope, wood, or metal that confines a yard or the jaws of a gaff to the mast but allows vertical movement.
- parsec — a unit of distance equal to that required to cause a heliocentric parallax of one second of an arc, equivalent to 206,265 times the distance from the earth to the sun, or 3.26 light-years.
- parsee — an Indian Zoroastrian descended from Persian Zoroastrians who went to India in the 7th and 8th centuries to escape Muslim persecution.
- parser — to analyze (a sentence) in terms of grammatical constituents, identifying the parts of speech, syntactic relations, etc.
- parted — partial; of a part: part owner.
- parter — a person or thing that parts; separator
- parure — a matching set of jewels or ornaments.
- pasear — to go for a rambling walk or paseo
- passer — a person or thing that passes or causes something to pass.
- paster — the time gone by: He could remember events far back in the past.
- patera — a shallow ancient Roman bowl used in rituals